English IV

Brave New World

Ch 10-11

1. What is ironic about the director’s plans for Bernard? What really happens?

2. What does the Director’s statement: “…no offence is so heinous as unorthodoxy of behavior. Murder kills only the individual—and, after all, what is an individual? …We can make a new one with the greatest of ease…Unorthodoxy threatens more than the life of a mere individual; it strikes at Society itself…”? Suggest about the value of human life in the Brave New World? What do the New Worlders value?

3. At this point in the novel, how do you feel about Bernard? About Lenina? Consider how people in the new world, including Bernard’s friend Helmholtz, feel about Bernard. Are they “good people”?

4. What might be foreshadowed when people say “that young man will come to a bad end,” and when Mustapha Mond says “for the moment, at any rate, the lesson would not be given.”?

5. What happens at the feelies? After?

6. Describe one activity that the characters engage in during Chapter 11 and explain why you would or would or would not engage in this activity.

Ch 12-13

7. John clashes with the people, the ideas, and the practices of the new world. Describe a specific incident that illustrates a clash between John and the people of the new world. Explain the reason for this clash.

8. Chapter 12 ends with Helmholtz’s mockery of Romeo and Juliet. In Chapter 13, Lenina confides to Fanny her feelings for John and says, “I shall always like him.” At the end of Chapter 13, we are told Lenina’s response to John’s remarks about marriage is genuine shock. What do you find ironic about this? What idea about love is suggested to you by these contradictions?

9. Although scientific advances of the past have given humans the ability to control human reproduction and disease in the new world, what seems to be the attitude of the government toward science?

10. Using quotations and examples, support the statement that Bernard is miserable, vengeful, jealous, resentful, and ashamed of his weaknesses, which makes him even more resentful.

11. Gossip explains Bernard’s small size as the result of an accident in which alcohol had been poured into his bottle by mistake. What detail is the reader given at the start of Chapter 13 that might suggest the gossip is true?

12. Would you be friends with Bernard? Explain how you would treat him.

13. What do you predict will happen to Bernard, John, and Helmholtz? What do you think will happen to Lenina?

14. We are told that people in the new world do not experience passion, so they have to be given treatments. For instance, Henry Foster tells Lenina to get “an extra strong V.P.S. treatment.” We also see that women get a “pregnancy substitute,” and the characters take soma on a regular basis so they can escape feeling passions. What conclusion can you draw from these facts?

15. Helmholtz says Shakespeare is a “propaganda technician.” Huxley says of Romeo and Juliet, “…what a superb piece of emotional engineering!” Then, Helmholtz tells John that a person has to hurt to write “penetrating, X-rayish phrases.” Do you think that people can control their feelings? Do you think that great art is related to passion and pain? Illustrate your opinion with real-life examples.